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Darvesh thanks for your reply. Yes you are right. Your point is clear to me.Darvesh wrote:as long u will leave before ur current leave expire and come back within 180days, no matter which visa, ur leave will not be broken.
wpilr_nov12 wrote:You need to find out more about 'varying' your application from T1E to ILR(LR), without having to leave the country and without breaking your 10 years. Go over to ILR section of this board for help.
If you apply for Tier 1 Ent, before your PSW expires and it refuses (no matter how long UKBA takes to make decision) then you will be given 28 days to leave the country and you leave within the given time then your 180 days will count from the day you left the country. If you re-enter with in 180 days, then your long residency should be fineMy point is, my PSW is expiring soon next month. I will send my application before it is expired, but by the time a refusal decision is made by the Home Office, my current leave to remain(PSW) will be expired definitely. So this means I have spent time in the UK waiting for a decision without a valid visa. I will not choose to appeal and I will go back to my home country within 28 days as requested. Then I will re apply to come back to the UK within 180 days. If I managed to have my application successfully, it means my 10 years is broken or not?
Section 3C protection will end on the 10th day following the receipt of refusal. Beyond that day, the applicant will be an overstayer in the UK. If the applicant leaves UK as an overstayer .... 10 year ILR goes down the drain .. even if he returns to the UK within 180 days on a valid leave.searoze wrote:If you apply for Tier 1 Ent, before your PSW expires and it refuses (no matter how long UKBA takes to make decision) then you will be given 28 days to leave the country and you leave within the given time then your 180 days will count from the day you left the country.
10 working days are to lodge an appeal following a refusal (If you given right to appeal)Section 3C protection will end on the 10th day following the receipt of refusal. Beyond that day, the applicant will be an overstayer in the UK.
Remember the word "overstaying" in the text you have quoted.searoze wrote:The 28 day period of overstaying is calculated from the latest of the:
end of the last period of leave to enter or remain granted
end of any extension of leave under sections 3C or 3D of the Immigration Act 1971, or
point a migrant is deemed to have received a written notice of invalidity, in line with
paragraph 34C or 34CA of the Immigration Rules, in relation to an in-time application
for leave to remain.
No matter when you apply, if you back within 180 days you should be fineOr there is no time limit as long as the absence is less than 180 days?